African Conference on Remittances and Postal Networks

African Conference on Remittances and Postal Networks

UNIVERSAL POSTAL UPU UNION OFFICIAL REPORT African Conference on Remittances and Postal Networks 4-5 March 2015 – Cape Town, South Africa Africa UNIVERSAL POSTAL UPU UNION African Conference on Remittances and Postal Networks 4-5 March 2015 – Cape Town, South Africa OFFICIAL REPORT For additional information please contact: Pedro De Vasconcelos, Manager Financing Facility for Remittances International Fund for Agricultural Development Via Paolo di Dono, 44 - 00142 Rome, Italy Tel: +39 06 5459 2012 - Fax: +39 06 5043 463 E-mail: [email protected] www.ifad.org/remittances www.RemittancesGateway.org This publication or any part thereof may be reproduced without prior permission from IFAD, provided that the publication or extract therefrom reproduced is attributed to IFAD and the title of this publication is stated in any publication and that a copy thereof is sent to IFAD. © 2015 by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) Printed September 2015 Table of contents Acronyms ................................................................................ 4 Introduction .............................................................................. 5 4 March Session I | Welcoming remarks .......................................................... 6 Session II | Sending money home to Africa via the post office .......................... 8 Remittance market in Africa: Opportunities and challenges ............................... 8 Linking remittances and financial inclusion: Postal solutions .............................10 Postal networks in Africa: Lessons learned and opportunities ........................... 11 Session III | Postal networks in the marketplace of remittances ........................12 What customers want: Realities on the ground ..........................................12 Highlights of the panel and plenary discussions .........................................15 Session IV | Postal operators and partners in the marketplace .........................16 Session V | Technology as an enabler of a more competitive marketplace .............19 5 March Session I | Exchanging experiences and plans .........................................22 GhanaPost: Its role and potential ........................................................22 Business development for remittances in Benin .........................................23 Towards operational excellence .........................................................24 Challenges in cash management ........................................................24 Highlights of the brief plenary discussion ................................................25 Session II | The road ahead ............................................................26 Session III | Conclusions of the Conference and Recommendations ...................28 Main recommendations .................................................................29 Appendix 1 | Agenda ...................................................................30 Appendix 2 | List of participants ........................................................35 3 Acronyms APFSI African Postal Financial Services Initiative ATM Automated Teller Machine AU African Union CENFRI Centre for Financial Regulation and Inclusion EC European Commission EU European Union FFR Financing Facility for Remittances ICT Information and Communications Technology IFAD International Fund for Agricultural Development IFS International Financial System MAP Making Access Possible MFI Micro Finance Institution MNO Mobile Network Operator MTO Money Transfer Operator PAPU Pan-African Postal Union PPPP Public, Private and People Partnership RNP Regie Nationale de Poste du Burundi SADC South African Development Community SME Small and Medium Enterprise UAE United Arab Emirates UNCDF United Nations Capital Development Fund UPU Universal Postal Union TNS RMS Taylor Nelson Sofres TPC Tanzania Postal Corporation WSBI World Savings Banks Institute 4 Introduction As remittances to and within Africa surpass the US$60 The conference covered key topics such as billion threshold and continue to grow rapidly, their developments in the remittance environment, market importance has rightfully started to attract global positioning of postal operators, experiences on the attention. Despite the magnitude of the remittance ground, linking remittances with financial inclusion, market in Africa and its subsequent development innovative technologies for financial inclusion, and the impact, many factors such as high transaction costs, legal and institutional environment surrounding post restricted rural payment networks, limited competition, offices and remittances. The conference also focused and problematic regulatory environments prevent these on the pilot projects currently under implementation in financial flows from reaching their full development Benin, Ghana, Madagascar and Senegal, in order to potential. Post offices are often well placed to deliver share best practices and discuss ways to expand and remittances, especially in rural areas, but they frequently scale up the pilots to other countries. Ultimately, the lack the business model, technology and expertise conference presented the opportunity to contribute to to process real-time payments in an efficient and and leverage the unprecedented momentum generated safe manner. Therefore, this conference serves as a by one of the most prominent and powerful financial much-needed platform to share knowledge, address and development forces of today: remittances. challenges, and explore the opportunities for improving the provision of remittance and financial services through postal networks. The conference was organized in the framework of the African Postal Financial Services Initiative, a joint regional programme launched by IFAD’s Financing Facility for Remittances (FFR) in collaboration with the World Bank, the Universal Postal Union (UPU), the World Savings Banks Institute (WSBI) and the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF), and cofinanced by the European Union. This unique partnership aims to enhance competition in the African remittance market by promoting, supporting and enabling post offices in Africa to offer remittance and financial services and to foster dialogue between stakeholders, regulators and policymakers. Welcoming reception 5 4 March Session I | Welcoming remarks remittances are the second-largest flow to developing countries but are also negatively impacted by many factors, including high transaction costs, restricted rural payment networks, limited competition and problematic regulatory environments. Entrepreneurs are beginning to see opportunities to improve these mechanisms. For example, in Africa, a start-up company called Mama Money was launched this year as the first purely homegrown South African company to be licensed Pedro de Vasconcelos, Programme Manager, by the South African Reserve Bank as an Authorized Financing Facility for Remittances (FFR), Dealer with Limited Authority. International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) opened the conference by thanking those who She then explained that about 2 million Zimbabweans had made the long journey to Cape Town. He highlighted are working in South Africa, which is one of the most the importance of migration and remittances to IFAD’s expensive countries in the world to send low-value work, which is focused on promoting rural development, remittances. One of the key global challenges is to and the impact on developing when 30 million people ensure a balanced approach to regulation in this sector, are sending over US$60 million in remittances to the with common standards and regulations throughout region. He then went on to describe the agenda of the the continent and worldwide. Non-official channels conference and the importance of identifying the next are not the objective because of exploitation and lack steps to maximize the potential impact of remittances on of guarantees. She emphasized that the European families, communities and countries. Union and European Commission stand behind the G20 commitment to reduce the cost of sending remittances from 10 per cent to 5 per cent by 2014, adding that postal networks represent a non-traditional channel with high potential. However, they often have weak operational capabilities and are not always present where they need to be. These are some of the issues that will require discussion. Sofia Moreira de Sousa, Deputy Head of Delegation, European Union Delegation to South Africa underscored the commitment of the European Union to the issue of remittances. The figures alone give more than enough reason to dedicate time to improving remittance flows to poorer as well as richer countries. The question is how we can work together to develop systems that allow for a more efficient distribution Irina Astrakhan, Practice Manager, Finance and and function of remittances, especially since there Markets, Africa Region, the World Bank, explained has been an upward trend in migratory flows. The that for over a decade the World Bank has been one of European Union has been looking at the research and the leading voices on the topic of migrant remittances, policy debate aspects of remittances with respect having played an important role in unveiling to the to poverty reduction and economic growth, since community the actual size of these flows. She added 6 4 March Session I that official figures often underestimate the magnitude of remittances, also due to the relevance of unofficial channels for transferring

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